r802 - trunk
DONOTREPLY at icculus.org
DONOTREPLY at icculus.org
Thu Mar 8 16:31:59 EST 2007
Author: icculus
Date: 2007-03-08 16:31:59 -0500 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007)
New Revision: 802
Modified:
trunk/TODO
Log:
Outlined TODOs for Unicode support.
Modified: trunk/TODO
===================================================================
--- trunk/TODO 2007-03-08 21:31:35 UTC (rev 801)
+++ trunk/TODO 2007-03-08 21:31:59 UTC (rev 802)
@@ -3,6 +3,33 @@
These are in no particular order.
Some might be dupes, some might be done already.
+UNICODE:
+- BeOS: uses UTF-8 internally in the OS, so that's already done.
+- PocketPC: uses UCS-2 internally in the OS, and we're currently converting to
+ and from ASCII. Need to change this out.
+- Windows: Can use Unicode, but might only allow "codepages" ... Use
+ GetProcAddress() to find Unicode entry points on WinNT-based
+ systems, otherwise try to use a sane codepage.
+- Mac Classic: apparently supports _something_, but I might just write it off
+ as a loss.
+- OS/2: Codepages. No full Unicode in the filesystem, but we can probably make
+ a conversion effort.
+- Linux: uses UTF-8 internally, so that's already done.
+- Mac OS X: uses UTF-8 in the Unix layer, and is smart enough to convert
+ internally when needed.
+- DIR: just pass UTF-8 strings through to platform layer.
+- GRP: No Unicode (only 12 bytes for filename, 8.3 format). Legacy format.
+- HOG: No Unicode (only 12 bytes for filename, 8.3 format). Legacy format.
+- LZMA: Uses UTF-8 internally, so we're good to go.
+- MIX: only stores filename HASHES...this driver is going away.
+- MVL: No Unicode (only 12 bytes for filename, 8.3 format). Legacy format.
+- QPAK: Only has 56 bytes for a path, but we can just treat these as
+ UTF-8 and be done with it.
+- WAD: No Unicode (only 8 bytes for filename). Legacy format.
+- ZIP: Uses UTF-8 internally, so it's good to go.
+
+Stuff:
+- Rename win32.c to windows.c ... it should work on Win64.
- Other archivers: perhaps tar(.gz|.bz2), RPM, ARJ, etc. These are less
important, since streaming archives aren't of much value to games (which
is why zipfiles are king: random access), but it could have uses for, say,
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